Given the experts at NASA still haven't worked out where it's going to fall out of the sky, I thought I'd have a little stab at a part of it. Where would it be if it continued on its existing orbit?

Found a website with current positions and recent orbital path. From that it is winding its way westwards with each cycle and it will pass somewhere UK/NW Europe-ish in 3 or 4 orbits. Assuming it's still in the sky then. Its low enough as it is so wont be visible unless you are fairly close to its path.

On a serious side from me, I was out in my garden 2 nights ago 9-9.30pm and I saw something fly over my house at very fast speed, I thought it was a Barn Owl at first, but it just glided and no flapping, no noise of anykind, no beating of the wings, but boy was shifting. It was going south to north and only visable for 2-3 seconds, and patchy clouds about, It was so stange I told the wife, I can't swear what it was. I only heard about it this morning on the news.

BBC news now reports that "The British Kettering Group of amateur satellite observers" calculate it may fall between midnight and 16:00 BST. So unless there is more definite info to say it's a sane time this evening/tonight I'm not going to try, as I think it'll be too far west for a decent chance overnight.

I kept refreshing the tracking webpage and it only came up just AFTER the sat passed over the south of UK. The next pass will be further north so less easily visible from south if at all. Besides, with the sun down now I'm not sure there'll be anything to see anyway even if the cloud wasn't there.